Colts Daily Headlines: January 15th Edition

Intro: Each morning Colts.com will take a look at the top headlines surrounding the Indianapolis Colts from around the globe.

INDIANAPOLIS – The Colts are in the midst of evaluation before the coaching staff heads to Hawaii early next week to coach the Pro Bowl. Today’s news looks at Andrew Luck’s thoughts on the loss to New England and what offseason position groups need upgrading.

Andrew Luck will take some time off between now and March but earlier this week he had to go back and watch the season finale loss to the Patriots.

"I just wanted to watch it just to start that process of getting over it," Luck said.

Luck, who cut his interceptions in half during the regular season, threw four picks in the loss to the Patriots to bring his two-game playoff total to seven.

"I don't think I'm quite over it yet," he said. "It's good motivation, too. Motivation and a learning tool. I know in my mind I got to be able to use that game as a learning tool and say how can I get better from that experience. I don't think I'm over yet."

It's not surprising that Luck is being hard on himself. You like for your franchise player to be one of the leaders of the pack when it comes to not settling. There would be reason to have concern if Luck was simply happy making it to the divisional round of the playoffs, reducing his turnovers and increasing his completion percentage from his rookie season.

"But at the same time, he can move on," Pagano said. "He's not one to beat himself up. He does a great job of that. He's one of the best I've ever seen as far as having amnesia and putting things behind him."

Holder takes a big picture look on some position groups that he feels the Colts need to improve on in 2014.

You already know the bad news: The Indianapolis Colts' season is over, coming to a sudden end Saturday night in New England in the AFC divisional playoffs.

But there is good news: The Colts have options to improve their team. Doing so will require smart decisions after lengthy deliberations between the coaching staff and front office.

Those are conversations already underway at Colts headquarters. Though the Colts don't have a first-round draft pick, they'll have more than $30 million in salary-cap space — which puts them in the top five according to most estimates — to solidify the roster.

So, where will the team's off-season efforts be concentrated? And what are some possible solutions? Here's a look:

Stay up-to-date on everything Colts! Sign-up for the Colts E-newsletter

Recent Videos

Four-year veteran Cheerleader Julia Pohlman sits down with Steve Andress to discuss her journey as a Colts Cheerleader to auditioning for the first time in 2011, to a Pro Bowl Cheerleader and team captain.